Why Use Squash?- Reducing the size of files for sending as email attachments.- Optimize images for websites and email campaigns so they load instantly online.- Slow internet? Drop images on Squash to save time when uploading to Facebook or Twitter!- Converting TIFF and RAW files into JPG's so they are web friendly.- And so much more.

What’s New

Version History

2.0.4

Sep 4, 2017

- Now compatible with High Sierra- TIFF images are now squashed correctly- Other minor bug fixes and enhancements

2.0.3

Aug 10, 2017

- Fixed an issue where the GPS metadata would be stripped out, even when the remove metadata option was not checked- Other minor enhancements and fixes- Keep on Squashing!

2.0.2

Dec 10, 2016

- Added a preference to convert PNGs into JPGs- Added a preference to remove meta data- Removed gif compression due to licensing issues (sorry)- We now keep date created meta data intact- Various other fixes and improvements

2.0.1

Nov 23, 2016

- Added an option to save the converted file in place- Added an option to always save files to a user selected folder

Happy Squashing!

2.0

Nov 23, 2016

Sep 4, 2017

Version 2.0.4

- Now compatible with High Sierra- TIFF images are now squashed correctly- Other minor bug fixes and enhancements

Ratings and Reviews

3.1 out of 5

9 Ratings

9 Ratings

Pixietale
,09/25/2017

Does what it says

I’ve had and used this app for quite some time now and I need to remember to use it more often. If only the rest of the Internet would use such apps like this more often the Internet as a whole would be so much better-off.

This app really does exactly what they say it does. For highly-compressed JPEG files I still manage to squash an average of 25K out of them. Sure, 25K may seem like nothing, especially in these days of broadband, but every kilobyte saved adds-up. Imagine those graphic-heavy pages, 10 images would be 250K saved. 25 would be 750K. Seriously. I remember the days when a 25K file would take 20 minutes to download. Just because we have blazing speed with broadband these days is really no excuse for not optimizing your images for the Internet.

And it’s not just web pages. An optimized image plopped into your MS Word file makes that Word file smaller. And when that Word file is converted into a PDF file that PDF file is smaller.

Get a clue, people, get this (or something equally as useful) and optimize your junk before plugging up my bandwidth! Hahahah

THIS APP REALLY WORKS.

Pixietale
,09/25/2017

Does what it says

I’ve had and used this app for quite some time now and I need to remember to use it more often. If only the rest of the Internet would use such apps like this more often the Internet as a whole would be so much better-off.

This app really does exactly what they say it does. For highly-compressed JPEG files I still manage to squash an average of 25K out of them. Sure, 25K may seem like nothing, especially in these days of broadband, but every kilobyte saved adds-up. Imagine those graphic-heavy pages, 10 images would be 250K saved. 25 would be 750K. Seriously. I remember the days when a 25K file would take 20 minutes to download. Just because we have blazing speed with broadband these days is really no excuse for not optimizing your images for the Internet.

And it’s not just web pages. An optimized image plopped into your MS Word file makes that Word file smaller. And when that Word file is converted into a PDF file that PDF file is smaller.

Get a clue, people, get this (or something equally as useful) and optimize your junk before plugging up my bandwidth! Hahahah

THIS APP REALLY WORKS.

One, Two, Tree
,10/04/2017

I can wait, but needs a progress bar

Took 10MB off a 38MB PNG image. Also took an hour to do it on my 2017 Retina Macbook 12”. I can wait, but I need to have an idea of how long it will take.

One, Two, Tree
,10/04/2017

I can wait, but needs a progress bar

Took 10MB off a 38MB PNG image. Also took an hour to do it on my 2017 Retina Macbook 12”. I can wait, but I need to have an idea of how long it will take.

Chi Sox Keith
,11/27/2016

Great app. Does exactly what it says

I have a couple of wallpaper applications over on iOS. Previously I would use Photoshop to compress the images to make the smaller and keep my app sizes to a minimum. Now I can work in full resolution in Photoshop then batch convert the entire directory of images to a lower resolution.

Others have complained that it made their files bigger, but I’ve tested the application on over 200 images so far and the end result has been a smaller image so far. Maybe the others are working with images that are already compressed and Squasher can’t make them smaller further.

This is a great application and well worth the price. It has saved me a ton of time.

Chi Sox Keith
,11/27/2016

Great app. Does exactly what it says

I have a couple of wallpaper applications over on iOS. Previously I would use Photoshop to compress the images to make the smaller and keep my app sizes to a minimum. Now I can work in full resolution in Photoshop then batch convert the entire directory of images to a lower resolution.

Others have complained that it made their files bigger, but I’ve tested the application on over 200 images so far and the end result has been a smaller image so far. Maybe the others are working with images that are already compressed and Squasher can’t make them smaller further.

This is a great application and well worth the price. It has saved me a ton of time.